transcurrierais
Syllables
trans-cu-rri-e-rais
Pronunciation
/trans.ku.ri.ˈe.ɾais/
Stress
00101
Morphemes
trans- + cur- + -rierais
The word 'transcurrierais' is a verb in the conditional tense, first-person plural. It is divided into five syllables: trans-cu-rri-e-rais, with stress on the penultimate syllable 'e'. The word is composed of the prefix 'trans-', the root 'cur-', and the suffix '-rierais'. Syllabification follows standard Spanish rules of vowel and consonant separation, with the 'rr' digraph forming its own syllable.
Definitions
- 1
Conditional tense, first-person plural of 'transcurrir'.
We would pass, we would elapse, we would go by.
“Si tuviera tiempo, transcurrierais más lentamente.”
“¿Cómo transcurrierais vuestras vacaciones?”
Stress pattern
The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable, 'e', which is the penultimate syllable according to standard Spanish accentuation rules.
Syllables
trans — Open syllable, initial syllable.. cu — Open syllable, contains the root vowel.. rri — Closed syllable, contains the trilled 'r' and the tense marker vowel.. e — Open syllable, unstressed vowel.. rais — Closed syllable, contains the conditional ending and is stressed.
Word Parts
Similar Words
Vowel Separation
Vowels between consonants are separated.
Consonant Cluster Separation
Consonant clusters are split according to pronounceability.
Single Consonant Rule
A single consonant between vowels typically goes with the following vowel.
'rr' as a Syllable
The 'rr' digraph always forms a syllable on its own.
Penultimate Stress
Words ending in vowels, 'n', or 's' are generally stressed on the penultimate syllable.
- The 'trans-' prefix can sometimes be considered a clitic, but for syllabification, it's treated as part of the word's structure.
- The conditional ending '-erais' is a relatively fixed unit.
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